Former MP Jackie Blue quits National to join Opportunity party

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jackie Blue has also been the Equal Employment Opportunities Commissioner. Supplied

Former MP Jackie Blue has resigned her National Party membership and joined The Opportunity Party.

Blue was a member of the cross-party People’s Select Committee on Pay Equity.

She says the government’s handling of the Equal Pay Amendment Act 2025 was her “breaking point”.

Blue will join Opportunity to mentor new leader Qiulae Wong.

She is praising Wong for having the courage to enter “the nasty business of politics”.

More to come…

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/former-mp-jackie-blue-quits-national-to-join-opportunity-party/

Kurahaupō waka goes on display at Masterton’s Aratoi Museum

Source: Radio New Zealand

[brightcove] https://players.brightcove.net/6093072280001/default_default/index.html?videoId=6390401519112

For the first time in several years the modern Kurahaupō waka has gone on public display after being moved overland from Levin to Aratoi Museum in Masterton.

The waka was built and launched to celebrate 150 years of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1990 and while it was not designed to be a replica of the waka which brought people to Aotearoa it has served as a vessel to bring their descendants together.

Piri Te Tau was one of the kaihoe (paddlers) aboard Te Waka Wairua o Kurahaupō in 1990. He said it was a new experience for many of them.

“I had never been at Waitangi before 1990, and the huge amount of people that were there, but the huge number of waka that was there. I think there was 30-something waka there that year, so that was huge for me. I’m a country boy, totally gobsmacked about the amount of people and the amount of whakawhanaungatanga that goes with that type of thing. It was brilliant.”

The waka was born out of the Kurahaupō Waka Society in the late 80s, a partnership between three iwi descended from the original waka, Ngāti Apa, Muaūpoko and Rangitāne.

The modern Kurahaupō waka has gone on public display for the first time in several years. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Te Tau said the waka was completed around January 1990. And although many of the paddlers from different iwi did not know each other the bond between them was immediate, he said.

“It was launched over in Horowhenua. We did all our training on the Lake Horowhenua, and that was very, very compacted. And most of us were novices. Well, I won’t say novice, we’d never done this before. But it was so exciting and innovative because we had a plastic fantastic, and we knew that we would get some critique from our peers, but we loved it. And so the day we went to Waitangi was the beginning of the real journey to take our waka up to Waitangi, the place where it all happens, in our humble view anyway, we’d never been there before.”

The hull of the waka was made from fiberglass rather than wood which caused some debate, he said. However the wooden embellishments, including the prow and stern, were carved from tōtara by tohunga whakairo Kelly Kereama.

“We weren’t trying to replicate the original Kurahaupō waka, because as we understand the original Kurahaupō waka was a double hull. We weren’t trying to do that, we were wanting to do a contemporary waka … because this was associated with three iwi, we wanted to be able to share it amongst ourselves, and a waka and fibreglass seemed to be the ideal thing for us.”

Piri Te Tau. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Te Waka Wairua o Kurahaupō is usually housed in Levin among the iwi of Muaūpoko.

“One thing that this waka has given us is that faith in our ability to make things happen. It’s not called the Waka Wairua for nothing … First of all we had to go over to tono for it from our whanau in Muaūpoko. They supported the kaupapa, and they assisted us in preparing to transport it over,” Te Tau said.

Te Tau said when they arrived to pick it up he could not stop crying, even once the waka was on board the truck.

“As it happened, it was just like, you know how they say that Moses cleared the waves. Well this happened on the day that we went over to Muaūpoko. It just went so smoothly. It was amazing.”

Te Waka Wairua o Kurahaupō is usually housed in Levin among the iwi of Muaūpoko. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The waka being put on display at Aratoi is a prelude to a Rangitāne iwi exhibition – Tino Rangitānetanga – which opens in May.

Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History director Sarah McClintock said opening a Rangitāne iwi exhibition at the museum had been years in the making.

The waka was being housed in a specially designed space in the museum’s courtyard, with temporary roofing to protect it from the rain.

“As much the waka loves water. We don’t want it to be flooded with water. So we wanted to protect it for the five months it’s here. But getting it from where it lives in Levin, onto the back of a massive truck, through over the big roads in the middle of the night, getting it here, then a crane to get it off because it’s heavy. And then getting it into the space created a lot, it was weeks of work,” she said.

Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History director Sarah McClintock. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

McClintock said the Tino Rangitānetanga will display the history, the present and the future of Rangitāne in Wairarapa.

The waka arriving at Aratoi was a teaser of how exciting that exhibition was going to be, but also a signal of the journey that the community, the museum and the iwi were on together, she said.

“We want this space to be their space, not that they’re occupying Aratoi, but they become part of Aratoi, that it becomes a safe space, a home for Rangitāne. And we know that they’ve felt that to an extent, but this really makes an incredibly strong and powerful message to everyone that we’re not about telling the story through a lens from any perspective other than Rangitāne’s.”

Te Tau said the iwi had been talking about holding an exhibition for about eight or nine years. It would be a chance for whānau to bring their taonga out, because many whānau had taonga at home but did not know how to care for it, did not know how to get it repaired and did not know how to store it.

“So it’s not just about showing our taonga, it’s about caring for them, it’s about when you need to have them repaired or better stored, it’s all of that stuff as well. Plus the feeling that we get from the whānau, and this is only the first four days it’s been on display, is one of a sense of belonging,” he said.

The hull of the waka is made from fiberglass rather than wood. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Rangitāne o Wairarapa kaumātua Mike Kawana said it had been very humbling to open the waka up to the public and see its reaction.

“We’ve had some great, great feedback from the whole community, not just our Māori whānau, not just those who have a connection to the waka and those who descend from the tūpuna of the waka, but from the whole community in terms of the experience that they have … listening to the kōrero, the history.

“You know, although it’s not an exact replica of the Kurahaupō waka, the name we’ve sort of utilised and been talking about over the last couple of weeks is He Waka Wairua and largely because of the journey that it’s taking those of us who are here as far as our own history, our own connection to our waka is concerned, along with other iwi who also connect and that’s Mauaūpoko, Ngāti Apa, and of course our other Rangitāne areas, Manawatū, Tamaki nui-ā-Rua, Rangitāne o Wairau anō hoki.”

Te Waka Wairua o Kurahaupō is on display at Aratoi in Masterton until 19 July, with the Tino Rangitānetanga exhibition opening on 2 May.

The wooden embellishments, including the prow and stern, were carved from tōtara by tohunga whakairo Kelly Kereama. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/kurahaupo-waka-goes-on-display-at-mastertons-aratoi-museum/

Second Oranga Tamariki boot camp will see youth stay four months instead of three

Source: Radio New Zealand

Oranga Tamariki’s second boot camp will have 10 teenagers volunteering to live at Palmerston North’s youth justice facility. 123RF

Oranga Tamariki’s second boot camp that begins on Monday next week will be longer in the lock-up phase and have more staff but still have only pilot status.

The second military-style academy (MSA) would, like the first camp, have 10 teenagers volunteering to live at Palmerston North’s youth justice facility but they would be there for four months instead of three.

They would go out into the community, supervised, for the rest of the year.

The second would, like the first, be run without the legislation to establish permanent bootcamps going through Parliament yet, though the bill was introduced to Parliament almost 18 months ago.

“It will build on the 2024/25 pilot,” said Oranga Tamariki (OT) online.

The legislation was to give judges the sentencing option and set up a category of youth offenders they could use it on.

A review of the pilot camp in 2024 found it was too thin on clinical staff.

OT told RNZ it had learned from that.

“There will be consistent therapeutic support throughout both the residential and community phases,” it said in a statement.

The camps were part of government’s moves to reduce serious crime by teenagers but opposed by the opposition.

Both whānau and the rangatahi had agreed to take part in the second one, the agency’s Dean Winter said.

They had to be eligible under the bill, with histories of serious and repeat offending, and be on a supervision order.

The Oranga Tamariki (Responding to Serious Youth Offending) Amendment Bill was introduced to Parliament in late 2024 and had a select committee report last May but has not had a second reading.

It would also set up a young serious offender or YSO category for 14-17 year-olds where the Youth Court was “satisfied on reasonable grounds that the young person is likely to reoffend and previous interventions have been unsuccessful”.

Winter said the teenagers would get life skills like budgeting, cooking, household maintenance, applying for a job and completing an interview, getting a bank account and starting the process to get a driver’s licence.

This was on top of “intensive physical, mental wellbeing and cultural support aspects”.

Iwi provider Best Care (Whakapai Hauora) that worked in the pilot had helped OT design the second academy.

OT made no mention of Defence Force involvement.

The NZDF resisted running the boot camps from very early on and recoiled from government comments about how involved it was.

Officials early on advised the government that softer-style boot camps were better, and a strict discipline model was “likely to be detrimental to young people”.

“The pilot programme evaluation showed promising results in driving change for participants,” OT said.

“The second programme will incorporate lessons learnt from the pilot and will provide further learnings to assist in the implementation of MSA programmes once the YSO legislation is passed.”

Budget 2025 put $33 million into the camps.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/second-oranga-tamariki-boot-camp-will-see-youth-stay-four-months-instead-of-three/

NZ travel agents helping clients escape Middle East conflict

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

Travel agents are helping their New Zealand clients get out of the Middle East.

It has been almost a week since the US and Israel began bombing Iran, which is carrying out retaliatory strikes on US bases and embassies.

Most commercial flights are not operating, with much of the region’s airspace closed.

Paul Diamond from Wendy Wu Tours said the company was helping to evacuate six New Zealand clients from Egypt.

“They were due to carry on through to Jordan. But obviously, with the travel warnings out, we decided that it was only right for the safety of the passengers to cancel the Jordan part of the trip and to find ways to get them home early.”

He said the clients were booked on upcoming flights from Cairo to Auckland via China.

He said one of their clients was not able to evacuate via London because of recent changes to immigration rules, meaning dual citizens can no longer use a foreign passport to enter the UK.

“We couldn’t reroute them back through the UK because even though they were born in Britain, they didn’t have a British passport with them. They only had their New Zealand passport. With the new immigration changes, EgyptAir told us that they wouldn’t be able to get on the flight to transit through London because they would have had to go through customs.”

He said they had rerouted or cancelled all tours going through the Middle East since the conflict broke out, affecting about 500 of their clients across New Zealand, Australia, and the UK so far.

“We won’t operate our tours, and we won’t send passengers through any country if there is a travel warning that says to avoid non-essential travel. We always cancel our tours and make other arrangements while those warnings are in place.

“We’re going to see a lot of disruption, not just for us, but for a lot of people looking to travel to Europe that have got their tickets booked with Middle Eastern carriers, which, since Covid, have been one of our main routes to get New Zealanders over to Europe.”

Flight Centre general manager Heidi Walker said some New Zealanders had been able to get on flights from Dubai to Sydney.

Flight Centre NZ general manager Heidi Walker. Supplied / Flight Centre

“We’ve been in daily correspondence with Emirates in New Zealand and many of the other airlines as well. They’ve been helping us get people onto the limited flights that are departing. Emirates has managed to get a few flights from Dubai into Australia, and those have been really beneficial to everyone trying to get out of there.”

She could not say how many clients were in the Middle East currently, but about 100 had planned to travel via Dubai in March.

“We’re reaching out to those customers who have booked with us to make sure that we can find the best solution for them. Everyone is a little bit different about what they want to do and where they need to get to.

“We are saying to everybody to make their own decisions, to not rush into any decisions. We’re trying to give them all the information that we have and refer them to where they can find information about the safety of the destination that they’re travelling to.”

She said there was no firm date on when Dubai to Auckland flights would resume.

“The message from Emirates, which I fully support, is that when it is safe to be able to travel, then they will look at that. But until the point where it’s safe, they won’t be resuming those flights.

“At the moment, the Dubai-Sydney flights are definitely filling our requirement to help New Zealanders out of Dubai.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/nz-travel-agents-helping-clients-escape-middle-east-conflict/

How do you know if your beach is okay to swim at?

Source: Radio New Zealand

After a couple of days of rough weather and some heavy rain, beaches all around Wellington’s south coast and in the inner harbour have been slapped with an unsuitable for swimming status.

The problem isn’t confined to the capital. Many Auckland’s beaches are often unswimmable after rain, and Christchurch is looking at a plan to divert wastewater into the ocean outfall pipe as the council struggles to control a stench from fire-damaged treatment ponds at Bromley.

RNZ/Charlotte Cook

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/how-do-you-know-if-your-beach-is-okay-to-swim-at/

House seriously damaged in overnight fire in Southland

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

A home is seriously damaged after a fire in Southland overnight.

Fire and Emergency says the property in Mataura, near Gore, was well alight by the time crews arrived at about 9.15pm on Thursday.

A spokesperson says nobody was home, but the house suffered extensive damage and fire crews had to call for backup from another station.

The blaze was under control by 10pm, but fire crews remained at the scene until midnight.

Police have had a scene guard in place overnight until a fire investigator arrives later this morning.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/house-seriously-damaged-in-overnight-fire-in-southland/

Why do some of us remember dreams and others say they ‘don’t dream’?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Some mornings, you wake up and the dream is right there. Clear and vivid. You might still feel the emotion in your chest, and it can take a few minutes to remember where you are and what was real.

Other mornings, you open your eyes and there is nothing. Just a quiet sense of having slept.

You might know people who think they do not dream. However, the reality is we all do. Sometimes we have many in one night.

Dreams can sometimes feel highly emotional, dramatic or unusually vivid.

Getty Images / Unsplash

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/why-do-some-of-us-remember-dreams-and-others-say-they-dont-dream/

What to know about the war in Iran

Source: Radio New Zealand

A man makes his way through debris littering a street following airstrikes in central Tehran, on March 4, 2026. AFP

A look at the history, the players, and the early stages of global fallout from the war in Iran

Acclaimed New Zealand foreign correspondent Anna Fifield was on the ground in Iran across two years as the Financial Times’ Tehran correspondent, allowing her to gain a deep understanding of the country’s history and political complexities.

So, she’s not surprised the long-simmering stand-off between Iran, the United States, and Israel has exploded into open war or that the ripple effects are being felt far beyond the Middle East.

She talks to The Detail about the war, which began over the weekend, when the US and Israel targeted Iranian military and strategic sites with coordinated strikes, after tensions over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions and regional militia support reached a breaking point.

Iran immediately retaliated with missile and drone attacks, and since Sunday, civilian casualties have mounted, global markets have wobbled, and disruption around the vital Strait of Hormuz has raised concerns about fuel prices and supply chains worldwide.

The impact is being felt in New Zealand.

So, with growing military, political, and economic fallout, The Detail looks at what led to the war in the first place.

“This is not the first time that the United States has intervened in Iran to try to bring about regime change, and it was not successful the first time round either,” says Fifield.

“In 1953, there was a democratically elected Prime Minister, [Mohammad] Mosaddegh, who the US and the UK actually overthrew because he was trying to nationalise the oil company at the time … and the US and the UK didn’t like the idea.”

That oil company is now known as BP.

“As in so many conflicts, this all comes back to the oil, so they overthrew him and reinstalled the Shah of Iran, who was a monarch who had been unseated there. He was very unpopular … he was very corrupt, and this directly led to the Iranian revolution in 1979 and the overthrow of the Shah, of the monarchy, and the installation of the Islamic State.

“So in many ways, the very existence of the Islamic State of Iran is a direct result of the US.”

She says this time around, there are three main players – Iran, Israel, and the US, which “Iran continues to call ‘the great Satan’”.

“Over the intervening decades and especially under the leadership of the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed on Saturday, they have become more and more hardline in terms of developing a nuclear programme, supporting other groups aimed at destabilising the regions, such as Hamas and Hezbollah, and the Houthis in Yemen, and really trying to assert themselves in the Middle East.

“Iran does not agree with the right of the state of Israel to exist, so Iran and Israel have been at loggerheads ever since as well.”

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu AFP

This, she says, does not sit well with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“So the tensions between Iran and Israel are very long-standing and have been simmering for decades; both of them see the other as an illegitimate regime.”

Then, she says, there is the US, whose relationship with Iran remains equally volatile.

“There has been ongoing burbling animosity there. Last year, we saw the limited strikes and 12-day war in June when Israel and the US went in together and took out a lot of Iran’s nuclear material, buried a lot of it under the rubble and really neutralised it as that threat. So this has been going on for a long time.”

Then, in January this year, thousands of Iranian anti-government protestors were killed by security forces during nationwide protests. That, in part, gave Trump a window to strike last weekend.

Back here, in New Zealand, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has taken a cautious line, calling for de-escalation while reiterating New Zealand’s opposition to nuclear proliferation. He has ruled out any military involvement and focused on the safety of Kiwis in the region.

But that response has drawn criticism, with opponents arguing the government should take a clearer stand on the legality and morality of the strikes.

“I think trying to strike a balance between condemning what is happening in Iran and saying ‘we have no love for that regime and what it stood for, but there are still rules and laws that have to be applied’, I think that’s where the government, and other governments, have struggled,” says Newsroom associate editor Sam Sachdeva.

For now, New Zealand is watching from afar – but in a globalised world, wars rarely stay contained. If oil prices spike, markets tumble, or the conflict spreads further, the impact will be felt here too.

And as missiles fly in the Middle East, the diplomatic balancing act in Wellington is only just beginning.

Check out how to listen to and follow The Detail here.

You can also stay up-to-date by liking us on Facebook or following us on Twitter.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/what-to-know-about-the-war-in-iran/

Why travel insurance might not help right now

Source: Radio New Zealand

Travellers are being warned to check what they are actually covered for by insurance. RNZ

Travellers are being warned to check what they are actually covered for by insurance if they cancel travel plans due to the conflict in the Middle East.

Insurance and Financial Services Ombudsman Karen Stevens said people should make sure they understood what they could claim for before they cancelled their insurance policies.

The conflict had closed many areas of airspace and meant a number of flights had been cancelled.

Many travel policies do not cover anything to do with the outbreak of war, civil disobedience or riot. That includes flights, accommodation or rebooking costs.

“I think most people don’t think about how the insurance is going to respond before they cancel,” Stevens said.

“They’ve got to be very careful before they just go ahead and cancel things.”

She said people should talk to their airlines first, or their accommodation providers, to see if they could get a refund or credit, or change their arrangements.

“A lot of people are still travelling or want to continue to travel, it’s just that because of the travel alerts and so forth and because of what’s going on in the Middle East they can’t go that way.

“But a much better suggestion for them is to actually start with the airline than it is to just cancel and then think that they can rely on the insurance cover because in most cases they will not be able to.”

Insurance would also not cover situations where people cancelled out of concern.

She said her scheme had dealt with many situations in which people had changed their minds about travelling and not been able to claim.

Stevens said she expected to receive complaints.

“I think to try and avoid those complaints, the best thing people can do is understand what they are covered for before they make any claims or before they decide to do anything about the travel arrangements. They really need to know if the insurer is going to provide the cover or they’re going to say an outright no as soon as the claim is made.”

Sign up for Money with Susan Edmunds, a weekly newsletter covering all the things that affect how we make, spend and invest money.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/why-travel-insurance-might-not-help-right-now/

How has Country Calendar lasted 60 years on NZ TV?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Taking the gravel road less travelled is one of the great joys of New Zealand’s longest running TV show, Country Calendar.

The iconic show, which has arguably the country’s most recognisable theme tune, celebrates its 60th birthday this weekend.

Host and director Dan Henry says Country Calendar has covered just about every corner of the country in that time “and some properties we’ve been to two or three times”.

“I really enjoy those stories where you get to go somewhere that you would got no business driving up, or to a part of the country that’s just a little bit inaccessible.”

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/how-has-country-calendar-lasted-60-years-on-nz-tv/

Reverse mortgage or retirement village: Which will give you the retirement you want?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jo Murphy says she very much regrets moving into a retirement village as early as she did.

She said she sold her freehold home at least 15 years too soon.

“It was a neat little brick home on a nice quiet side road in Waikanae… the garden and the drive took hard work to keep tidy but I was fit and well, I had established some beloved plants. The labour – with hindsight – was beneficial and the property looked good too.

“Maybe I was simply lonelier than I thought … I had lots of activities so I didn’t put my finger on it being loneliness.

“I badly wanted to take that reverse mortgage but I also was thinking about my daughter who’s clued up on finances. She was a senior dealer for a while in the money market, and I could feel her disapprobation… so I stalled.”

She has since moved through three retirement villages in two parts of the country and said her capital had been eroded to the point where she could not buy another home if she left. The villages charged an initial fee for an occupation right agreement as well as ongoing fees.

“I had no idea until I wasn’t in my own home how much agency you lose in your day-to-day life. A lot of decisions are made around you. In this particular instance where I am now… I live with their constant vibration.”

She has been distressed by ongoing noise in her unit but was not able to do anything about it.

Planned work had not happened as promised, she said. Other people who were considering making a similar move need to think about what they were giving up, she said.

It is something that many people around the country are weighing up, particularly if they have built up good levels of equity in their homes but are struggling with the rising cost of living.

Property law expert Joanna Pigeon said people who were “asset rich and cash poor” often found it tough to stay in their homes when the cost of rates, insurance and other expenses increased.

But she said there were things to weigh up, whichever path someone took, and there could have been drawbacks if Murphy had opted for the reverse mortgage.

Heartland, for example, charges a variable interest rate – currently 7.75 percent – on reverse mortgage lending. This compounds because repayments are not made until the property is sold. Pigeon said this could mean equity reduced quickly.

“I would encourage people considering whether to have a reverse mortgage to have legal advice, and to also if suitable discuss with their family. Sometimes family members may prefer to assist if they can to assist with the preservation of equity in a property.

“The decision whether to go into a retirement unit or remain in a home with a reverse mortgage will always depend on age, stage and health situation. Care may be required at a later date, and if equity is eroded by a reverse mortgage it may reduce options if say a fall necessitates care needs etc. It is impossible to have a crystal ball for potential needs in the future. These potential issues need to be discussed and a decision made in the circumstances. Reverse mortgages are a product to enable a person to remain in their home, but the pros and cons need to be weighed up.”

Retirement Village Residents Association president Brian Peat said he chose a retirement village because he needed to find something quickly when he returned from Queensland.

He said it was not common for people to regret moving into a village but it was a “huge step into the unknown” for residents.

“”It is certainly a different lifestyle and some adjust but others don’t.”

Michelle Palmer, executive director of the Retirement Villages Association, said there were about 53,000 people in retirement villages around the country and 130 moved in every week.

“However, we recognise village living isn’t for everyone. That’s why we encourage anyone considering a move to visit different villages, talk to residents and have conversations with family and friends.

“It is also a legal requirement under the Retirement Villages Act to obtain independent legal advice before signing an agreement. “

She said Murphy’s experience was not typical and she was disappointed and surprised that none of the villages had met her expectations.

“The residents I speak with tell me they value the sense of community, companionship and security villages provide, along with the peace of mind that comes from a low-maintenance lifestyle. They tell me how much they love the village amenities and activities. For many, access to hospital-level care, should they need it, is also an important consideration.

“Some older New Zealanders do choose options such as a reverse mortgage to remain in their home. However, many residents appreciate that in a retirement village, exterior maintenance, lawns, rates and often building insurance are managed by the operator. In many cases, retirement villages also have fixed weekly fees so that provides greater financial certainty.

“As people age, the responsibilities associated with owning a house can become more physically demanding and a financial burden, so having them taken care of provides real reassurance.”

Heartland Bank general manager of retail and reverse mortgages, Will White, said there had been a 15 percent increase in reverse mortgage business in the past six months. There are now more than 26,000 people with a Heartland reverse mortgage.

He said reverse mortgages were popular when prices increased and people had more equity to draw against. They were still popular now, in a weaker housing market, when people struggled with the cost of living and rising rates.

He said people who were under the age of 60 would not be able to access a reverse mortgage. “The earlier you get the reverse mortgage, the more interest you will pay.”

But he said there were many customer protections in place that were not there 20 years ago.

“People rightly have a long memory and there’s this idea that debt’s going to be left to the children, you no longer own your own home… all those things are false but it’s always important for us to make sure we get those messages out there that it’s a different product than people remember.”

Sign up for Money with Susan Edmunds, a weekly newsletter covering all the things that affect how we make, spend and invest money

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/reverse-mortgage-or-retirement-village-which-will-give-you-the-retirement-you-want/

NZTA considers U-turn on 100k speed limits for SH1, SH57 south of Levin

Source: Radio New Zealand

Speldhurst Residents Committee chair Roger Parton was delighted by the proposal to change the speed limits back. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

The Transport Agency (NZTA) is considering a U-turn on 100-kilometre speed limits put in after they were reduced by the former Labour-led government south of Levin.

Last year State Highway 1 and State Highway 57 south of the Horowhenua town had speed limits increased from 80 kilometres per hour after the transporting agency was directed to consult on the changes.

Over half of the people who submitted backed upping the speeds, but many in the local community warned against the changes, including the local council.

During the period the road has had a 100-kilometre speed limit in place one person died in a crash.

When it was 20 kilometres lower between 2020 and 2025 no one died on the road.

NZTA has since announced it had opened consultation to put the speeds back down.

It would also put up variable speed limits outside Tukorehe Marae and Wehi Wehi Marae.

Waka Kotahi director regional relationships Linda Stewart told RNZ the reversal came from community concerns.

“NZTA has received a considerable amount of feedback from the local community, iwi and freight operators that the 100km/h speed limit is not appropriate in these locations.”

Stewart said there had also been concern from the Speldhurst Country Estate on State Highway 75 and that a major expansion at the village meant it would soon accommodate more than a thousand residents.

Molly Page lived near State Highway 57 and said the speed limits should not have gone up.

“It is a dangerous piece of road and we know that because how many accidents have there been?”

Molly Page has fought the Transport Agency before over the speed limit. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

Page said State Highway 57 travelled past the country estate Speldhurst which had elderly residents.

“As you get older it is just a fact that reaction times are much slower and putting that road up to 100 kilometres … it is just unsafe.”

Speldhurst Residents Committee chair Roger Parton was delighted by the proposal to change the speed limits back.

“Just watching the traffic going past at 100 kilometres and the big trucks going 90 [kilometres] and you have got people coming out of the retirement village onto the public road.

“It is a disaster waiting to happen.”

Horowhenua Deputy Mayor David Allan said the speed reductions were “better late than never”.

“It is a shame that they were reinstated to 100 kilometres in the first place, council opposed it at that time, and we welcome any proposal to reduce the speed limits.”

Transport Minister Chris Bishop. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Transport Minister Chris Bishop told RNZ the road was and is safe, but given the scale of development happening in the area NZTA had assessed that some sections of the highway may need lower speed limits.

In July RNZ reported Ngāti Tukorehe Tribal Committee chairperson Pikitia Heke said pleas to keep the stretch of highway at the 80 kph speed limit had “fallen on deaf ears”.

At that time Alicia Miratana a descendent of Ngāti Wehiwehi and who lived in Manakau said speed affected how Wehi Wehi Marae operated.

“We have our kaumātua that no longer walk to the marae it is just too unsafe for them, we don’t allow our tamariki to walk home from the marae it is not for them. But the biggest fear we have for Ngāti Wehiwehi is that we have a kōhanga reo on our marae.”

Consultation would end 9 April.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/nzta-considers-u-turn-on-100k-speed-limits-for-sh1-sh57-south-of-levin/

NZ Defence Force planes prepare to fly to Middle East for evacuations

Source: Radio New Zealand

A plume of smoke rises after a strike on the Iranian capital of Tehran on 5 March, 2026. AFP / ATTA KENARE

Follow the latest with our live blog above

Foreign Minister Winston Peters says when conditions allow, NZDF planes will help New Zealanders get to locations where they can get on commercial flights home.

He says they will not be long flights.

The minister says at the speed at which potentially thousands of people need to be moved, it’s better they are taken to a safer place as fast as possible.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade said 3171 New Zealanders were registered with its service SafeTravel in the region.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/nz-defence-force-planes-prepare-to-fly-to-middle-east-for-evacuations/

Rugby: Moana Pasifika relocate to Rotorua

Source: Radio New Zealand

Moana will host the Chiefs at Rotorua International Stadium on April 11. Photosport

Moana Pasifika will not play in the Pacific Islands this season, and have instead been forced to move one of their matches to Bay of Plenty.

The franchise announced on Thursday that the match scheduled to be played in Tonga, has been relocated to Rotorua.

Moana will host the Chiefs at Rotorua International Stadium on 11 April.

Nuku’alofa was originally intended as the venue for this fixture, but financial barriers once again blocked Moana going to the islands.

Under minimum broadcast standards, staging a Super Rugby game in Tonga requires transporting roughly three tonnes of equipment into the country at a cost of $600,000 – an expense the club must cover themselves.

It was a tough pill to swallow for Moana, who also had to cancel their Tonga visit in 2024 due to floodlight issues.

“It’s not a small undertaking to go over there and put on a game for our people. But that doesn’t mean that we’re not going to try and get there again. We just know we’ve got to do a bit more work and be able to hold a game there,” coach Fa’alogo Tana Umaga told RNZ.

However, Moana remain optimistic.

Moana Pasifika CEO, Debbie Sorensen said Bay of Plenty was a “win-win for both teams.”

“While we are sad we can’t take this game to Tonga, we do know that our fans and our community are everywhere – including in the Bay of Plenty region. I know Rotorua will also welcome the visit by the Chiefs.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/05/rugby-moana-pasifika-relocate-to-rotorua/

Officials warns that retail crime advisory group lacks relevant expertise after resignations

Source: Radio New Zealand

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

  • Officials caution that after resignations retail crime advisory group doesn’t have security or facial recognition expertise
  • Group chairman says it will deliver robust reports on these issues to minister
  • Ministry of Justice says its advice still stands.

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith has ignored advice from officials warning the remaining members of the ministerial advisory group charged with tackling retail crime don’t have relevant expertise in matters it will issue advice about.

Three of the five members of the Ministerial Advisory Group for Victims of Retail Crime resigned late last year and early this year, leaving just chairman Sunny Kaushal and Hamilton liquor retailer Ash Parmar.

Goldsmith confirmed last month that the group, which has faced criticism for its spending, will wind up in May, four months earlier than planned.

Before then the remaining members are expected to in April deliver advice to Goldsmith about the security industry, and facial recognition technology and information sharing.

Kaushal, who owns Auckland’s Shakespeare Hotel and is an advocate for retail shop owners, says he’s confident he and Parmar can deliver robust work.

The Ministerial Advisory Group for Victims of Retail Crime is headed by Sunny Kaushal. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

But, a 26 January briefing from Ministry of Justice officials to Goldsmith and Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee, obtained by RNZ, has raised concerns.

‘Remaining members do not hold subject matter expertise’

Group member Michael Bell quit late last year. His resignation was followed by Lindsay Rowles and Carolyn Young earlier this year.

“The three members who resigned, brought experience and expertise in the retail sector and in security and crime prevention,” the briefing said.

Young is Retail NZ’s chief executive. Officials said she brought leadership and experience to the group.

Retail NZ’s chief executive Carolyn Young Supplied

Bell, who worked for Michael Hill, was a key member of the jeweller’s security taskforce, which is “responsible for monitoring retail crime trends nationally and globally, and implementing prevention measures”.

Rowles had expertise in security and crime prevention, having formed and led Foodstuffs’ retail crime working group, which included trialling facial recognition technology

Continuing with just two group members came with a warning: “We do not consider the current membership meets the requirements established in the terms of reference, as there are no members who bring experience and expertise in security.”

Suggestions for a way forward included terminating the group as soon as possible; letting it run until September as planned; appointing new members to the group to replace the three who resigned; or winding it up early after it delivered in April reports on the security industry and facial recognition technology and information sharing.

This is the option Goldsmith chose, announcing on 10 February the group would continue with its current work before winding up in May.

“We consider there are two primary risks with proceeding on this basis. The first is that the advice provided by the MAG will be on behalf of the two remaining members and will not reflect discussions and endorsements of a fully constituted membership with a breadth of expertise and experience required by the terms of reference,” the briefing said.

“This is particularly important given that the remaining members do not hold subject matter expertise relevant to the areas covered by the reports – security industry, FRT, and information sharing.”

Chairman says advice will be robust

Kaushal told RNZ he was confident the group would deliver robust advice about the security industry and facial recognition technology.

He said all the group’s proposals were developed after at least two rounds of feedback from the likes of the retail sector, government agencies, local councils and non-government organisations.

“In the case of our FRT advice, we’ve consulted with privacy experts, the Privacy Commission, UK regulators, and FRT service providers both in NZ and the UK, along with retailers and sector groups,” Kaushal said.

“In the case of our security industry advice, we’ve consulted widely across the sector in New Zealand, with regulators here, and with industry bodies in Australia and Canada, along with retailers and sector groups.

“Our policy process is robust. It involves the MAG developing both an issues paper and an options paper – both of which are consulted on before final advice is prepared. We contract with experienced policy professionals to support the MAG in developing its advice.”

Kaushal said he was working with ministers on making sure the group’s remaining advice was balanced and considered a full range of sector views.

He said the group’s record spoke for itself.

“In just 18 months, we have delivered substantial and measurable progress in strengthening law and order. Through the ministerial advisory group, I have led seven major legislative-ready reform proposals.

“Four have already been accepted by the government to progress into law, including the Crimes Amendment Bill currently before Parliament.”

That bill includes extended powers for citizens’ arrests.

Goldsmith was asked about officials’ concerns about the expertise of the group’s two remaining members. His office said he had nothing further to add.

Ministry deputy secretary, policy, Caroline Greaney said: “The advice given stands, and the ministry has nothing further to add regarding that.

“An approach to mitigating some of these concerns is being worked through now, but at this point there is nothing more to say.”

New Zealand Security Association chief executive Gary Morrison said it was “reasonably relaxed” about the change in group personnel, and it had given feedback about facial recognition technology 8-10 months ago, before the resignations.

The association dealt with advisers to the group and Morrison had found they’d taken a balanced approach to issues.

‘Not played out as I hoped’

Bell’s resignation letter said that due to the significant time commitments of his job as Michael Hill national retail manager, he couldn’t focus enough on the group’s work.

Rowles was stepping down after his appointment as Mitre 10 chief executive, a position beginning this month.

Young’s letter said she decided to resign after consulting with the Retail NZ board.

In a covering letter to justice secretary Andrew Kibblewhite she thanked ministry officials for their support, but added: “… it certainly has not played out as I had hoped and it is disappointing that we haven’t been able to do more meaningful work with this group.”

She later told RNZ the group was a “very unpleasant environment” in which to work.

The group was supposed to operate for two years to September. It has an annual budget of $1.8 million, paid for from the proceeds of crime fund.

It has delivered advice to the minister on issues such as tougher penalties for shoplifters, strengthening trespass laws, and introducing new citizens’ arrest powers.

But, it has faced criticism about its value for money, including the $230,000 Kaushal invoiced for work in its first 12 months, which was allowed under the group’s payment guidelines; the central Auckland office space it rents for $120,000 a year; and the $24,000 spent on 22 well-catered stakeholder engagement meetings around New Zealand.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/05/officials-warns-that-retail-crime-advisory-group-lacks-relevant-expertise-after-resignations/

Questions raised over TVNZ’s editorial independence

Source: Radio New Zealand

TVNZ. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Questions have been raised about TVNZ’s editorial independence after its chair discussed a news story with Broadcasting Minister Paul Goldsmith, media commentator Tim Murphy says.

TVNZ chair Andrew Barclay rang the minister after Goldsmith and cabinet colleague Mark Mitchell expressed dissatisfaction with a 1News story about gang numbers.

Goldsmith appointed Barclay to the public broadcaster’s board in September.

The story, about gang members now narrowly outnumbering police officers, aired on 1News last Thursday.

The report aired the same day the latest Crime and Victims survey showed 49,000 fewer victims of violent crime in the year to October 2025 compared to the previous survey in 2023.

Barclay spoke with Goldsmith over the phone before 1News ran a second story with a more positive angle.

Goldsmith, who is also the Justice Minister, confirmed he had spoken to the 1News journalist after the first story aired.

“Just like I often do when I’m not happy with a story, I ring the journalist and give them the benefit of my opinions,” he said.

Broadcasting Minister Paul Goldsmith confirmed he had spoken to the 1News journalist after the first story aired. RNZ / Nathan McKinnon

Goldsmith then said he had a “very short” call from the chair of TVNZ’s board “on a range of matters”, and the story came up in passing.

He “absolutely” did not bring the story up himself and he did not discuss editorial matters with Barclay, Goldsmith said.

“It’s not appropriate for me to be talking about political discussions and editorial matters with the board, and I haven’t,” he said.

Newsroom co-editor Tim Murphy told Midday Report running the second 1News story following those events gave the impression TVNZ was trying to make up for upsetting the government.

However, there were still many unanswered questions.

“The independence from ministers and the government of the day is really important for TVNZ and RNZ particularly, but how much went on and where and by whom I think we’re yet to find out,” Murphy said.

“Probably we’ll have to rely on the Official Information Act among other things to really know quite how involved or otherwise political interests were.”

It would be unusual for TVNZ’s chair to ringing the Broadcasting Minister about the broadcaster’s coverage, he said.

“The chair and the minister talk and that’s sort of the line of authority if you like, but not I think when the minister has been complaining so loud himself under his other portfolio,” Murphy said.

Barclay ought to have been aware of the “twilight zone of politics and media and journalism ethics”, he said.

Police Minister Mark Mitchell took to Facebook to express his frustration with the story after 1News’ gangs report.

Mitchell said it was “absolutely unbelievable” that, on a day the government had announced fewer victims of violent crime and a reduction in serious repeat youth offending, 1News “chose instead to engage in unbalanced journalism by running a story about gang membership with none of the context around the outstanding work our police are doing in cracking down on gangs in New Zealand”.

Five days later, 1News ran a second story reporting on the crime statistics the government had announced the previous week.

Mitchell again raised what he said was an “unbalanced” report during Question Time on Wednesday.

Labour’s police spokesperson Ginny Andersen then asked Mitchell whether he, any member of his office or any person acting on his behalf made contact with the TVNZ board regarding the report.

Mitchell said he had received a call from a “senior” TVNZ person to apologise after his Facebook post but he had not contacted anyone at TVNZ. He also confirmed the person he spoke to was not a member of the public broadcaster’s board.

A TVNZ spokesperson said the organisation’s political editor had contacted Mitchell’s office after the gang numbers story to advise the victims of crime data “should have been included”.

The spokesperson said the story was then reviewed internally and an editorial decision was made to run a follow-up story “incorporating those figures to ensure balanced coverage and to aid audience understanding around the use of differing crime statistics”.

The board chair and the minister talked regularly, TVNZ said.

“TVNZ’s Board Directors also take an interest in how editorial standards are maintained. But editorial independence is of paramount importance to us and operational decisions on how stories are covered are our own.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/05/questions-raised-over-tvnzs-editorial-independence/

Wairarapa residents want flood-protection action

Source: Radio New Zealand

Adam Mazzola’s home was half a metre underwater in some parts during the peak of Monday’s flooding. Adam Mazzola

Flood-hit residents on Wairarapa’s south coast are demanding action after a creek burst its banks during torrential rain.

Low-lying homes in Whāngaimoana Beach were inundated when a severe storm swept across the lower North Island last month, closing roads, cutting power to thousands, and severing communities.

Locals say heartache could’ve been avoided if the stream bordering their properties had been dug out.

They’ve called on the council to open it to the sea so that it can drain during heavy rain, but the council says it’s not its responsibility.

Emergency operations says multiple warnings were issued about the flood risk and has signalled that flood mitigation will form part of its recovery work.

‘The water would’ve just buggered off’

Sections of the Whāngaimoana stream run through private property, including an identified and protected wetland, before hitting the beach, which is publicly owned.

When it breached its banks on Monday, 16 February, Adam Mazzola and his son were forced to evacuate as the water rose by up to half a metre inside their home.

They’ve been living elsewhere ever since, and Mazzola said they wouldn’t be returning to the 100-year-old bach – it’s too damaged.

A Givealittle page has been set up to help him “get back on his feet”.

Mazzola said it was important to know who was responsible for the stream and wanted to see a machine on standby to dig it out in the future.

“It [flood mitigation] could have saved our place and others if it [the stream] was cleared out and maintained,” he said.

Adam Mazzola looks at damage to his home. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Neighbours Jason Statham and Mellisa Tipene highlighted the same issue when RNZ visited.

Tipene said their property had flooded a “handful of times” in the past decade and believed opening up the stream at the beach would reduce the frequency.

“If they open up a mouth like Lake Ferry out the end there, so the water can release itself, you wouldn’t have it backing up and coming in here … and constantly flooding your yard that you work hard to… beautify.”

Whāngaimoana beach. RNZ

Statham said the rain warnings came well in advance of the downpour and thought there should have been some proactive flood mitigation.

“They should have been down there two days before it happened and opened up the mouth, and I don’t think that [the flooding] would have happened, the water would’ve just buggered off,” Statham said.

“But they didn’t do that. They warned us and all that, but they didn’t do f*** all.”

Property owners responsible for flood protection – council

While surveying the damage to her backyard, local Terry Shubkin told RNZ that more than one home in the lower section of the street flooded when the stream burst its banks.

Terry Shubkin. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Shubkin said flooding in the settlement was increasing in frequency, with the latest inundation on par with a “one-in-50-year flood” that hit in 2004.

She said she’d been pushing the Greater Wellington Regional Council [GWRC] for help on-and-off in the years since, but “the response I get is, ‘It’s not our problem.’”

Shubkin said the council put up a drone after “much nagging” last year and found willows and sediment were clogging the stream in places, but she said that was only part of the problem.

“The creek doesn’t actually flow out to the ocean; it closes off,” she said.

The regional council’s director of delivery, Jack Mace, said the council does carry out flood protection work in the area, but unfortunately, the creek falls outside its remit as set out in the Lower Wairarapa Valley Development Scheme.

The scheme from the 1960s is set for review in the next two to three years and covers building and maintaining stop banks, floodways, and drainage, as well as the opening of nearby Lake Ōnoke / Lake Ferry.

A council spokesperson said following the drone flight, recommendations were made to the landowner with the willows.

They said while Greater Wellington has powers to intervene in waterways – such as opening stream mouths – it won’t at Whāngaimoana because the creek doesn’t meet its criteria for management.

“Private landowners have a responsibility to protect their land from flooding unless there is a relevant river management plan/scheme in place.

“For this creek and community, the best opportunity to advocate for Whāngaimoana to be included in a river scheme is in the review of the Lower Wairarapa Valley Development Scheme.”

Mace said the regional council understood the impact of severe flooding on rural communities and believed it would take a long time for the region to fully recover.

“Our focus now is on stabilising river corridors within the scheme while we work to understand the extent of the damage and what may be required long term.”

Flood mitigation to be considered

Wairarapa Emergency Operations Centre said it was advised by the regional council that “Whāngaimoana was vulnerable to flooding if the stream breached its banks and sea swell backed up flood water” on Sunday, 15 February at 8.47pm.

A spokesperson for the office said staff followed up with residents as soon as it was safe to do so the next day, and noted that public advisories about the flood risk in low-lying areas – including an emergency mobile alert – were issued prior to and during the storm.

They said support agencies had boots on the ground in the immediate days after the flooding in Whāngaimoana and confirmed one family was still being “actively supported”.

“Regarding the clearing of streams and flood mitigation, we don’t have the necessary information to comment specifically about this situation at the moment, but this will form part of the recovery office’s work with impacted communities.”

In addition to immediate repairs, the recovery office – recently established by the South Wairarapa District Council – would focus on what communities needed to build resilience in the medium to long term.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/05/wairarapa-residents-want-flood-protection-action/

Health NZ says petrol vouchers helping lower MRI waiting list in Greater Wellington

Source: Radio New Zealand

Health NZ Capital and Coast group director of operations Jamie Duncan said the scheme was about improving overall access to MRI scans. 123RF

Health NZ says an initiative to give patients in the Greater Wellington region petrol vouchers to drive to Whanganui for an MRI scan is working to bring waiting lists down.

Hundreds of patients in the region had been offered $150 petrol payments to travel out of the district to get the diagnostic procedure faster.

There had been criticism of the scheme – with the senior doctors union claiming it offered people the chance to buy their way up the public wait lists for MRI scans.

But Health NZ Capital and Coast group director of operations Jamie Duncan told Checkpoint that was not the case.

“We’re providing support for people that have the ways and means to access the scans in Whanganui. I think the impact here is twofold. Clearly those people get access to a scan, but what it does do is it frees up capacity locally on our MRI scanners for those people who aren’t in a position to travel,” he said.

Duncan said 288 patients had taken the opportunity to travel to Whanganui with a petrol voucher.

“What that means locally is from September our waiting time for a scan was approximately six months in Wellington, now just over six months later the wait time is closer to three to four months,” he said.

“It’s having a significant impact in improving access locally.”

The target wait time was six weeks for an MRI scan.

“We still know we have a ways and means to go to hit that target but you can see on that trajectory we’re moving there quite quickly,” Duncan said.

Duncan said the scheme was about improving overall access to MRI scans.

“There are other things we’re doing locally to improve access, we’re outsourcing to private providers, we’re employing more radiology staff in the public system to increase access to public MRI, we’re working weekend shifts to improve access as well,” he said.

Duncan said there were seven public MRI machines in the central region, with Whanganui being one of those.

There were two in Wellington Hospital and one in Hutt Valley Hospital.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/05/health-nz-says-petrol-vouchers-helping-lower-mri-waiting-list-in-greater-wellington/

Fine for unreported Hector’s dolphin death reveals toothless system, conservation group says

Source: Radio New Zealand

The camera on-board FV Emma Jane recorded images of a net being cut and a dead Hector’s dolphin sinking to the sea floor. RNZ / Alison Ballance

A small fine meted out to an Otago fisher, who killed a Hector’s dolphin then lied to officials, underscores the failure to protect endangered species, a conservation group says.

Māui and Hector’s Dolphin Defenders uncovered the death of the dolphin – one of only about 40 left in the area – and fought through the courts to obtain the details.

Founder Christine Rose said the case laid bare a toothless system that failed to act as a deterrent to the fishing industry and also highlighted the vulnerability of relying on the industry to self-report bycatch.

The Moeraki fisher, who RNZ has chosen not to identify, was already before the court for illegal fishing when the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) discovered he had killed a Hector’s dolphin while set-netting off Otago’s coast in February last year.

The camera on-board FV Emma Jane recorded images of the net being cut and the dead dolphin sinking to the sea floor.

Neither MPI nor the Department of Conservation (DOC) brought charges over the death of the dolphin. However, MPI charged the man with failing to report the capture under the Fisheries Act.

While it is illegal to harm a protected species, commercial fishers are exempted for “accidental capture”, or bycatch.

The Ministry for Primary Industries said, although killing protected wildlife as bycatch was not an offence, it took the prosecution for failing to report the incident “due to the seriousness of the non-reporting”.

DOC said its only involvement in the case was to confirm the mammal in the camera footage was an endangered Hector’s dolphin.

Industry group Seafood New Zealand said fisheries were the most regulated and surveilled primary industry in the country and the case showed the rules were working.

Otago University emeritus professor Liz Slooten said the case proved dolphins killed by fishing gear were not always reported.

It comes as the government sought to roll back parts of the camera programme.

The current law – which had no penalty for fishing industry-related dolphin deaths – was not fit for purpose, Slooten said.

‘A dirty old shag’

After the dolphin’s death was discovered the skipper lied in his catch report, responding ‘no’ when asked if any protected species had been caught.

When fisheries officers asked about the catch he told them it was “just a dirty old shag or a seven-giller (shark)”, according to MPI’s summary of facts.

When formally interviewed he admitted to catching the dolphin claiming it was a “common dolphin”.

Another of the man’s ships, FV Triton, was caught trawling illegally days earlier near the mouth of the Ōrāri River in South Canterbury while skippered by another man.

A no trawl prohibition applied in the area from January to April to protect sea-run Chinook salmon, MPI described the fish as being at “crisis point”.

The ship’s owner said he was unaware of the no trawl areas.

He was charged with trawling inside a prohibited area.

‘Manifest injustice’

The fisher pleaded guilty to all charges last September and was fined $5000 for failing to report the dolphin’s capture, $10,000 for trawling in a prohibited area.

Both ships were automatically forfeited.

However, the man kept both ships in exchange for a fee of $14,460.

Rose said the man would be able to treat the fine and buy-back costs as the price of doing business.

“Hector’s dolphins are priceless but the court’s judgement makes dolphin lives look worthless,” she said.

Hector’s dolphins are only found in New Zealand waters and are estimated to number about 15,000, a stark decline from the 50,000 estimated in 1975.

The case showed the organisations charged with protecting threatened marine mammals were failing, Rose said.

“If this was a kiwi or a kākāpō people would be rightly outraged. But, because it’s a dolphin, we only know about it because of the persistence of groups like ours.”

Rose learned of the death after spotting a reference to unreported bycatch in a presentation from MPI.

The dolphin’s death was not initially reported on DOC’s database, though it had since been added with a note that “due to an ongoing compliance investigation, this incident was not reported publicly until January 2026”.

The court did not impose any suppression orders and ordered the release of the information to Māui and Hector’s Dolphin Defenders last month.

“When he was finally prosecuted, as we find out from the district court records, it turns out he’s got a history of breaking the law and despite the fact he’s been fishing for 40 years he pretends to not know what the rules are,” Rose said.

“The fine he gets for all of this is only $5000 and forfeiture of his boat but in the meantime he’s able to buy that boat back and can be right back out there fishing.”

MPI’s 2023-24 South Island Hector’s bycatch reduction plan annual report noted that on at least four occasions the same fishing boats killed more than one Hector’s dolphin in a 12 month period.

MPI director of science and information Simon Lawrence said when Fisheries New Zealand finds evidence of breaches of fisheries rules it took a range of actions from education to prosecution.

Prosecution decisions were made based on Crown Law guidance, he said.

DOC biodiversity system and aquatic director Kirstie Knowles said DOC became aware of the dolphin’s death in April when Fisheries New Zealand asked for confirmation the footage showed a Hector’s dolphin.

As a Fisheries investigation was already underway, DOC did not open a separate investigation under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, Knowles said.

The High Court found in 2024 DOC’s approach to prosecution and investigation were unlawful and lacking.

Rose claimed DOC and MPI were failing in their duties.

“MPI are protecting the fishing industry, they’re not upholding the rules. DOC are nowhere to be seen. They should have been prosecuting this under the Marine Mammal Protection Act,” she said.

“Both these agencies that are supposed to be upholding the law and the flourishing and preservation of the marine environment and these protected species are missing in action.”

Less than a fifth of on-board footage monitored in last quarter

Before the introduction of on-board cameras, the industry reported one or zero Hector’s dolphins deaths in nets or trawls between 2014 and 2022.

But 15 deaths were reported or observed in the first year on-board cameras were rolled out.

Seafood NZ chief executive Lisa Futschek. RNZ / Kate Newton

A 2025 MPI report said about 30 percent of footage had been reviewed since 2023.

Figures for the quarter to September 2025 showed only 18 percent of footage was reviewed.

Seafood NZ chief executive Lisa Futschek said the Otago case showed the system was working.

There were clear rules on reporting, she said.

“We have a robust system. We need to work within it, and we do, and for those who don’t there are clear consequences which is what happened in this case,” Futschek said.

There were limits on the number of dolphins the fishing industry could kill in certain areas.

Those limits protected endangered species, Futschek said.

In the South Island the limit was 47.5 dolphins per year, but last year only seven were killed by the industry, Futschek said.

“So whilst even one capture is too many, we are still doing really well when it comes to making sure that particular species continues to thrive,” she said.

However, in the East Otago region the limit is two deaths per year.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/05/fine-for-unreported-hectors-dolphin-death-reveals-toothless-system-conservation-group-says/

Over 3000 New Zealanders in the Middle East amidst conflict

Source: Radio New Zealand

A plume of smoke rises from the Zayed Port following a reported Iranian strike in Abu Dhabi. AFP / RYAN LIM

More than 3000 New Zealanders are in the Middle East as the Iran war continues.

The US and Israel have been bombing Iran for almost one week, with Iran launching retaliatory strikes on US and Israeli bases across the Middle East.

Travel warnings are in place, and most flights in and out of the region are not operating.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade said 3171 New Zealanders were registered with its service SafeTravel in the region.

That included 1,893 in the UAE, 411 in Qatar, 401 in Saudi Arabia, 120 in Egypt, 42 in Jordan, 72 in Kuwait, 55 in Bahrain, 30 in Iran, 12 in Iraq, and 83 in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory, 38 in Oman, and 14 in Lebanon.

However, it expected the actual number of New Zealanders in each country to be higher.

Defence Minister Judith Collins previously told Midday Report on Thursday, two NZDF planes would be leaving New Zealand in the coming days.

“We’re not saying exactly where they’re going to be, for obvious security reasons, but we will be saying to people, if you want to leave, we’ll get you out of the region into a safer region…. but we won’t be bringing back the thousands of New Zealanders who we know are in the region all the way back to New Zealand.

“We’ll get you to a place where you can be safe and you can get commercial flights.”

The government is urging New Zealanders in the Middle East to register on SafeTravel in preparation for evacuation.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/05/over-3000-new-zealanders-in-the-middle-east-amidst-conflict/